Zilsh is a Zshell configuration framework designed to get the fuck out of your way.
Zilsh started as a fork of oh-my-zsh, but totally ceased being that within a week. Now it's a better system, but it's still 100% compatible with oh-my-zsh, via the wonderful oh-my-zilsh bundle, which should stay (fairly) close to oh-my-zsh's HEAD.
I've designed this specifically for the crazy power users who want to go through the manual labor of configuring their shell by hand, just to get every detail perfect.
It's not feature-rich; it's feature-less. By design. It weighs in at under 100 lines (97 to be precise).
I use it for my dotfiles, and you totally should too (not that I'm biased or anything).
Well, I'll go down the list of other options:
- antigen — Probably the best alternative to zilsh, in all honesty; however, it follows the Vundle approach, not the Pathogen approach. Not that that's bad, it's not! It's just not how I like to do things. I like manually controlling my plugins as git submodules. Plus zilsh is over 600 lines shorter than antigen.
- oh-my-zsh — This is actually a damn good option as far as monolithic template-based configuration systems go. However, it has its own update system which is not really compatible with dotfiles repositories, and the fact that you work inside of it instead of around it results in some entertaining bugs. Also, if you don't like monolithic solutions (I don't), you probably never liked it at all.
- prezto — This is far less monolithic, but still template-based and so doesn't really work as a git submodule.
- Doing It Yourself — Why the fuck would you do this when you could just use zilsh?
All other solutions right now revolve around templates. You install the template, and then build your modifications on top. While this is an okay solution in some cases (quick start with ZShell), it's really not good for those of us with dotfiles repositories.
Simply add this git repository as a submodule, and add the following to the top
of your .zshrc
:
source ~/.zsh/zilsh/zilsh.zsh
_zilsh_init "~/.zsh/bundle/"
$ cd ~/.zsh
$ git clone https://github.com/NuckChorris/zilsh.git
And then add the following to the top of your .zshrc
:
source ~/.zsh/zilsh/zilsh.zsh
_zilsh_init "~/.zsh/bundle/"
Zilsh provides a number of useful configuration options which allow you to fine- tune it to your exact needs.
If you want fancy-schmancy colors in the logging messages (as well as the
helpers of $fg
, $bg
, $color_reset
, etc.) you should add the following
above where you source zilsh:
autoload -U colors && colors
Set this variable to control the logging level of Zilsh.
3
— Shows debug, warning, and error messages. Generally not required unless you're actually working on Zilsh itself.2
— (DEFAULT) Shows warning and error messages. This is recommended for everyday usage; warnings are no less evil than errors, except they aren't immediately harmful and Zilsh still loads.1
— Shows error messages. This one sounds safe at first, but it isn't. Trust me, you don't want to use this setting. Yes, it bitches at you less, but you won't see deprecation warnings and so upgrading is dangerous.0
— no logging, not even errors. Probably a bad idea.
A ZShell Bundle is a directory containing a set of related functions, utilities, completions, etc. in the same layout as a full oh-my-zsh install.
HOWEVER, there is one difference: lib/ is now configs/ (though lib/ still works for legacy reasons, it is strongly recommended that you do not use it)
In case you haven't already figured it out, it's easy to use anything designed for oh-my-zsh (including oh-my-zsh's builtins) — just drop it in a bundle, and it'll work like always.
An example of an oh-my-zsh wrapper bundle is provided in oh-my-zilsh.
- Clean up the zshBundle layout and reduce legacy shit.
- Add support for zsh-syntax-highlighting highlighters to zshBundles
All contributions should follow the coding styles set out by surrounding code.
Indent with tabs; align with spaces. Yes, let me repeat that: INDENT WITH TABS; ALIGN WITH SPACES. Got it? Good.